Human error, not technology, is the most significant cause of IT security breaches, according to a security survey released by the Computing Technology Industry Association Inc. (CompTIA) today. The ...
Human error accounts for three-quarters of incidents where sensitive data is lost, new research has revealed. A report from the IT Policy Compliance Group says a ...
Network outages can often be traced to four error-prone activities: fault analysis and response, configuration changes, scaling and failover, and security policies ...
Imagine you receive an email from your CEO instructing you to make an urgent wire transfer to a supplier. Since this email is from the C-suite, you immediately take action and make the transfer, never ...
Max Silber is VP of Mobility & IoT at MetTel, where he leads mobile & IoT operations and related business development initiatives. For years, cybersecurity focused on perimeter defenses. Today, with ...
When I read the article that human error was the source of most breaches and data loss in 2014, it was not a surprise. You can pick any study about computer-related ...
Attributing manufacturing problems to “human error” is an oversimplification that can mask deeper failures, according to Ann Ryan, head of business development at Ireland-based training and technology ...
Dear Eric: Recently, I was making a payment on my account to a medical facility by phone. The receptionist accidently hit the wrong number and charged me hundreds of dollars more than my actual bill.